Carmela and Meadow Soprano at the Brooklyn Museum (opening scene of Amor Fou)
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- Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
- There I was doing some late night pre-bedtime Sopranos clip procrastination when I looked for one of my favorite scenes and realized no one had put it up on RUclips.
One of the most beautiful scenes in the entire series
After becoming a mother for the first time I'm exactly the same way whenever I see mothers with their young innocent babies. Makes me cry, the beauty of it all, the innocence of a sweet child. ♥
Edie Falco is one hell of an actress!
Well the song is about a woman who’s man is cheating on her but she still loves him….sounds like Tony and Carmela’s marriage
And Meadow and Jackie.
Yeah I'm gonna say that's not random
Carmela has a sensitivity that is neither seen, appreciated nor used by anyone in her family and that just makes loneliness a big issue for her, maybe one of the reasons she is so insistent on this cheating thing of Tony's, while as for other subjects she isn't worried. It might be because not having not even a partner, even if only superficially, strikes her even harder.
Congrats, Noam, you are now a borko associate. 2k a week goes directly to borko himself, now that he's in the can
The sopranos community kills me
This joke is so tired and lame
And so it goes this thing of ours
You wanna keep Borko happy maybe? 3 no shows, 2 no work
@@luisdavid8441 im talking here!
this is one of my favorite scenes in all of television
Me too! I didn't intend to become some rando dude posting Sopranos scenes, but I find this scene so stunning and I figured I wasnt the only one
I thought I was the only one
It's scenes like this, which is a minor scene incidentally that makes The Sopranos (one of) the greatest tv shows ever made. Perhaps THE greatest.
The classics created by painters, the painting ages, as do we. The artist may have a definite meaning. The meaning on any painting/art created by its creator, what they are feeling. Viewing art as you grow with age, to me, is the wonder of these creative artists. I feel differently about paintings I saw at 21 years old, as I am now 55. A few have not altered with my aging. 'Girl with a Pearl Earring'- my absolute fav. I always felt very strongly about her gentle expression, innocent but not naive. No judgement. Just pure beauty.
Edie Falco is one of the greatest actresses in the Universe
and in history
I love Carmella's love of art!
i know, my favorite b plot of hers was her trip and all the art she saw
I love her booty.
Carmela has always been artistic, book smart, and intelligent. She's a fan of the Arts. Interested in Culture. Very emotional when it came to expression. I'll never know why she ended up with a criminal like Tony. She could've been better with that one Philosophy teacher. Forgot his name. He was AJ's High School teacher. Then again, he turned out to be a jerk.
Young, naive and probably just settled. She had a lot of depth that was wasted on Tony for sure
@@hanspz5505 I agree. Tony's self-centered nature is surely a ball-breaker for everyone that tried to strike intellectual conversations with him. I saw this happening with Carmela and that other woman that attended his psychiatrist.
@@Cheirador123 Gloria? Yeah definitely. Tony was always punching 😂😂
No she wasn't she knew fuck all about art remember the episode where she and the other bags tried to create a film club or whatever and proceeded to watch Citizen Kane only to not understand or appreciate it at all? Or what about that teacher who gave her that book Madame Bovary and she even said it went completely over her head?
She's a poser and little else.
Carmela explains it to several people, several times. She wanted things. She wanted to be someone, she wanted all the money and power that someone from her culture and strata could achieve. And to disregard Tony as simply "criminal", as something less than a "normal" person, is to misunderstand the core lessons of the show
If the men are confused by this scene, allow me to assist:
Carmela realizes she's entering menopause, hence the spotting she was talking about. She gets emotional at the image of the baby because menopause signals the end of women's fertility.
It's not super complicated.
She wasn't looking to have a baby though..
Weirdo
Well, that's not self-righteous and reeking of sexist disdain. Thanks for the mental pause.
Nice fem-splaining
It’s not, yet you felt the need to explain it.
Such a beautiful scene
Wow, just wow..Edie Falco is one amazing actress..among the best I have ever seen
Wow, that one was fucking powerful.
Thank you, King 👑
“It’s the Babybel cheeses”
I completely forgot this scene
1:37...Carmela gets emotional over a painting. Tony did too. The haunted barn with the hollowed-out tree, Pie-O-My painting.
Perfect scene
00:01....First, Tony gave her the emeralds, then he gave her the pearls.
Carmela thinking she’s the _Mafia Prima Donna,_ hilarious. Same thing when she goes to Paris
What did she mean when she said "we all do" in response to "she married a baby?"
She means that every man deep down is a child to be nurtured, full of anger and fear and love. You dont love a baby because of what it does for you, you humbly and selflessly serve it in admiration just as she, in the painting, admires the baby Jesus. Carmela admires the female subject of the painting for the strength she shows in her being at peace and wishes that she herself could be that strong for Tony, and in that failing, she feels that she is not only failing Tony, but also her lord Jesus.
@@rich8642 Not a bad interpretation. Still, I think there is a much deeper, mystical meaning to this scene and Carmelа’s words.
It's because men are emotionally much less mature and refined than women. Just look at the irrational, violent behavior of the mobsters. Men are extremely immature, compared to women.
@@comedychrises fascinating, therein you have an implication that this all exists without mention of any type of fatherhood. Would that be "sacrilegious" ?
@@comedychrises Well. If you can't see "fatherhood" in the relationship is ignored you could include that in the rhetoric...
What’s the song ?
She was spotting
🤭🤭
song name?
Don’t know the song but the singer is Cecilia Bartoli.
Sposa son disprezzata, sung by Cecilia Bartoli
@@skip6485 Thank you!
I always find this scene hilarious and i dont think carmela is supposed to "get" the painting at all she just sees a baby and is like oh im having baby emotions because of my kids growing up and menopause
meadow's lipstick is horrid
She’s pregnant
"Intro to Semiotics" Pahahaha, what a joke
Carm is absolutely insufferable in this scene.
Spotting is such a gross term
Little spots of blood hence the term spotting lol
There's a better one in the house on the shoes "shinebox", if you would be so kind to pardon my request for access of the historically esteemed article..?
@@dasmith1207 I'm confused lol what is it you want?
@@itasasumadaxnaruuchiha5338humorous referral to location of a "better term" for spotting that wasn't medical in origin.
@@dasmith1207 ah I see
She should be crying about how fake and idolistic that pairing is.
...what?
Gross
Just the image you want in your head a middle age woman talking about herself spotting. 🤕
why don't you go watch some WWE videos instead
most vaginas are good, most
Never trust an animal that bleeds for 7 days and doesn’t die
@@elit3268 lol.. you realise you sound like an incel right
Lonnie, how old are you? You're talking like a preteen lmao
I love the first lines “imagine having your painting in here” - “she’s just the wife of a rich merchant” hmmm 🤔